Yes...... I know of two similar individualsl.
One seems to be well adjusted however. I served with Rick on the Board of Directors of our local Jaycees. He was presumedly happily married with two kids. He ran a successful insurance office for a national company. He was a good ol boy beer drinking buddy.
To what seems everybody, he left his wife and became a women. The company had no problem with his name change to Rikki. He is a very good businessman and has prospered. He became associated with a lesbian who had several children. He created for her a business and also one for her mother. Her kids came of age and they are all in business.
It is a very straange state of family affairs but aside from the jilted wife and husband apparently is a very prosperous arrengement.
I am his/her custonet that sometimes still calls he Rick.
Well, your friend Rick or Rikki has the right to live the life he wishes. And it is hardly my job, or yours, to judge him for what he has done.
But there is a hidden impact, something you didn't mention. It's the effect of his transitioning on his two children.
The media, and most progressives, just assume that the children were raised liberally, in favor of gay and trans people, so when their dad decides to become either it's just no big deal. But that is ever so wrong.
The children are permanently devastated. There are websites where these teens are crying out, furious, hurt and angry, even suicidal. They say things like "my Dad becoming gay and leaving my Mom is worse than if he'd died." They can't explain why, because they are not anti-gay (or anti-trans). Most traditional psychologists call it a distinction between the political belief that gay and trans are OK versus the emotional foundation provided by both a mother and a father, a need that is there regardless of politics, for a man and a woman.
The same thing is true of children raised by two men or two women. They will love their two dads or two moms, of course, but they will always have an ache for the missing biological parent. Always. And since this notion of "it only takes two loving parents regardless of sex" is still so new, we really haven't seen the full impact yet.